Very very cool. Thanks to All of us that will never see this kind of ops in person!!
@davidostrander32958 ай бұрын
What an experience! Great video.
@b.douglasjensen8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@nathanstrains12110 ай бұрын
Fantastic video, that is a once in a lifetime event! I grew up near Benicia, so saw that bridge a bunch, and even crossed the railroad bridge a bunch commuting to work on the Capitol Corridor after college. Enjoyed the look back at the 'good old days'.
@sixriversrail8 ай бұрын
So glad you captured that, definitely rare footage. Dolph Pierce used to run the bridge in the mid-80s, no idea either who the guy is in your video. I took 14 to work one morning from MTZ to Emeryville and it just happened to be the day when six tugs grabbed onto the Glomar Explorer to begin its slow journey to Texas, first top was Hunters Point in SF iirc. Bill Cotton was the conductor that day, was so neat to see a big boat leave and not immediately be cut up for scrap.
@b.douglasjensen8 ай бұрын
Thanks very much. I never met Bill Cotton but I understand he was quite the guy.
@brentmiller395110 ай бұрын
My father worked for Southern Pacific and would run in front of the trains opening 3 trestles. The biggest one across coos bay in Oregon spun and did not lift .It had a glass floor in one spot that you could stand on and watch the trains go under you .I also ride lots of engines and cabooses from the depot to Florence or ride with my father out to Florence so he could escort the train back to the depot .I see the machinery and can almost smell.that place .
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
I did a speeder run on the Coos Bay years ago and to me, that's one of the most beautiful trips ever. Thanks for your response
@BudmanPackfan10 ай бұрын
Great video. Thanks for sharing this classic, once in a lifetime experience!!!!
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@davew.723610 ай бұрын
Fantastic to see the bridge up close, along with the USS Halsey. What a great view and info about the bridge and signal. Lucky you!! Thanks, Doug!
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
Indeed very lucky Dave..... thank you!
@nikdog4198 ай бұрын
Back when I680/780 was just the one bridge. I don't miss the weekend traffic out of the bay on that. Also back when the Mothball fleet still existed (although maybe there are still 2 left? pretty sure last I looked it was all gone and a relic of my childhood.)
@myexpressways410610 ай бұрын
I am old enough to recall that area while the ferries still operated. I still visit my family who still live in Martinez. I worked as a Firefighter for several years at Station 14 in downtown in the 1970s. Great memories and recording of places never seen before. Thanks Doug.
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@johncamp2567Ай бұрын
One remarkable video….wow!
@b.douglasjensenАй бұрын
thank you
@mikelukash913310 ай бұрын
Excellent video! You said it "once in a life time'
@mrhyde302910 ай бұрын
Great video. I live in Benicia and have spent countless hours in traffic on the old bridge watching that thing going up and down. I'd forgotten just how many ships use to be moored in the mothball fleet. Today they are (thankfully) all gone.
@trainsimulatordriver10 ай бұрын
I've watched that thing go up and down once. Great you got to look. I got to the top of the North Tower of the Golden Gate bridge once when doing some work with the bridge district.
@beaubeagle28146 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. I’ve gone past on the auto bridge hundreds of times over the past 60 years and twice over the rail bridge. This was a real treat to see the bridge’s operation!
@trainknut6 ай бұрын
That guy has probably got the coolest office on the whole SP at this time
@J3scribe9 ай бұрын
Luck and Fate were with you that day. Awesome.
@echohunter419910 ай бұрын
Not Northern California, i was born in Sacramento and it’s in the center of the State, Redding, Mt. Shasta and Eureka are north, lol. I remember when Suisun Bay mothball fleet was full,of ships in the up’s, just amazing.
@RailsOfTheSouthProductionsАй бұрын
9:55 holy cow does that ship have some dark history with the government. Sick catch
@RoyJNg3 ай бұрын
16:17 that's the Hughes Glomar Explorer, the CIA ship that was used to pick up the K-129 Soviet submarine from impossible depths.
@normsweet171010 ай бұрын
Many thanks to “Mr Bridge operator” ❤️❤️❤️❤️🙂
@StanFong10 ай бұрын
Awesome views! Great video!
@michlo339310 ай бұрын
I remember working as a switchman in Ozol talking to the guy on the bridge. We'd go out to Avon or do the Shell job, and I always thought it was odd we were getting track lists and information from the bridge lol What a fun time looking back. Except for Avon, that place was full of spiders.
@dezy894110 ай бұрын
I worked Ozol as well - ‘06😂 conductor on the C&H job, and Benicia auto facility and so much more! I’ve left sugar alone ever since working that job..lol
@michlo339310 ай бұрын
@@dezy8941 Yeah, lol funny how that works out.
@jamesg2609Ай бұрын
My ex sister in law worked the tower as a combination yard master and bridge operator she retired over 10 years ago
@wondabiz10 ай бұрын
im so happy i got this suggested to me, i was just in martinez the other day and was thinking about how little footage there is of SP around the Suisun Bridge and on the opposite side. awesome vid
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it.... thank you!
@WMAC_Master10 ай бұрын
great video! very unique angle. Cool to see SP out there too! I've never seen this bridge operate before, i know it's still used though. Since the video was taken, another side of the freeway has also been added.
@Sacto165410 ай бұрын
The second northbound bridge was built between 2001 and 2007. It originally had a huge toll booth on the Martinez size, but that was phased out in favor of FasTrak electronic toll collection and toll collection by photography of driver license plates and billing based on that plate.
@AB-vc7ox7 ай бұрын
That’s a nice trip back in time, I used to do the I-680 commute across the bridge during the 90’s before most of the ships were scrapped. It was a nice view while stuck in traffic waiting to get through the tool booth.
@jasonalperin94148 ай бұрын
Today u have the Starlight,Zephyr and over a dozen Capitol Corridor trains in each direction crossing and a handfull of UP Freights,even Stack trains heading east/_west
@warrengibson78986 ай бұрын
Fascinating!
@kevin24723 ай бұрын
I love that the Bridge Operator is at work dressed like he’s ready for a day at the beach 😂
@ShawnCalay2 ай бұрын
My dad used to go to work at BN with ACDC concert shirts on....I used to wear shirts like the bridge tender when I was a conductor at CC/IC, then CN started the dress code stuff.
@dfirth2242 ай бұрын
The bridge was built in 1930 to replace the ferry boats that hauled passenger trains between Benicia and Port Costa.
@georgetarabini65523 ай бұрын
Great time capsule
@thomream188810 ай бұрын
Can you imagine a RR employee doing something like that nowadays? But what a treat. I do wonder though - his 'uniform' was way too clean for an SP guy!
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
He was a pretty casual guy form everything I recall. I believe he is an SP employee and I'm pretty sure he lived in Martinez. And even then I was shocked that he invited me to come up to the control booth. Notice my trepidation even when an SP train is crossing the bridge and I'm filming it but the operator told me it was no problem.
@StanFong10 ай бұрын
Do you think he's retired by now?@@b.douglasjensen
@royreynolds10810 ай бұрын
Did the operator tell you why there are chains hanging from the bottom of the lift span on each end? I was enamored with the lift and machinery room. I and another guy went to the Atchafalaya River bridge at Simmsport, LA in 1971 to receive instructions on how to open and close the turn span if we needed to do so.
@b.douglasjensen10 ай бұрын
I didn't even see the chains so I'll have to relook at the video.
@royreynolds10810 ай бұрын
@@b.douglasjensen There are usually some chains attached to the bottom of each end of the lift span and the abutment or bottom of each lift tower. These are meant to match the added weight of the cables holding the counterweights. There is a weight change in the cables as the span is raised and lowered which needs to be taken into consideration to even the load on the lifting motors. Those chains do that. Also, that bridge was the heaviest moveable bridge when built and it replaced very unique ferry for moving trains across the river. There was a story about the ferry in either LIVE STEAM and OUTDOOR RAILROADS MAGAZINE or NARROW GAUGE & SHORT LINE GAZETTE MAGAZINE. The ferry operated for about 40 or so years before the bridge was built. What is left of it can still be seen in an estuary on the east side of the Bay. At 4:05 is one of the 4 taper rails to fill the gaps in the rails and a lock mechanism to interlock with the signal system.
@rebelroar78Ай бұрын
2:39 back before smartphones when you couldn’t just look up a ship’s number.
@princessofthecape2078Ай бұрын
You think of the nineties as recent. Then you remember that you're old.
@jeffreymcfadden940310 ай бұрын
USS Halsey was scrapped in 2003.
@jasonalperin94148 ай бұрын
Cool but death defying actually walking out on the bridge like that!
@dfirth2242 ай бұрын
You mean an "E" ticket. Years ago Disneyland had a low entrance fee, but each ride needed a ticket. You bought books of tickets. The best rides needed an "E" ticket.